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- The 44-year-old was given two months鈥� house arrest in August over a protest in July
- How Marina Ovsyannikova left and where she went are still unclear
Russian TV journalist Marina Ovsyannikova, accused of spreading fake news after staging a series of lone protests against the war in Ukraine, said on Wednesday she had fled house arrest because she had no case to answer.
鈥淚 consider myself completely innocent, and since our state refuses to comply with its own laws, I refuse to comply with the measure of restraint imposed on me as of 30 September 2022 and release myself from it,鈥� she said.
In a video posted on Telegram, she sat on a pink sofa and addressed Russia鈥檚 Federal Penitentiary Service, criticizing President Vladimir Putin over the war.
鈥淧ut a tag like this on Putin,鈥� she said, gesturing to what appeared to be an electronic ankle bracelet.
Her lawyer said she was supposed to turn up to a court hearing at 10:00 a.m. Moscow time (0700 GMT), but that investigators had failed to establish her whereabouts.
Investigators had asked the court to convert her initial house arrest order into jail time if she is found, but the court refused to do so, her lawyer said.
Ovsyannikova grabbed world attention in March by walking out in front of studio cameras during an evening news broadcast on state television with a placard that read 鈥淪top the war鈥� and 鈥淭hey鈥檙e lying to you.鈥�
The Kremlin at the time denounced her act of protest as 鈥渉ooliganism.鈥�
The 44-year-old was given two months鈥� house arrest in August over a protest in July when she stood on a river embankment opposite the Kremlin and held up a poster calling Putin a murderer and his soldiers fascists.
She faced a sentence of up to 10 years in prison if found guilty of the charge of spreading fake news about Russia鈥檚 armed forces.
Her house arrest was due to last until Oct. 9, but the state-run news outlet Russia Today reported on Saturday that she had fled along with her 11-year-old daughter, and that her whereabouts were unknown. How she left and where she went are still unclear.
Russia passed new laws against discrediting or distributing 鈥渄eliberately false information鈥� about the armed forces on March 4, eight days after invading Ukraine.